But Scott Drew's team could get tripped up this year because of turnover problems

AP Photo/Jim UrquhartPerry Jones III has scored seemingly at will since returning from a five-game ban.

On Aug. 22, 2003, Scott Drew was introduced to the media as the new head coach at Baylor, and the first thing to be noted about that fact is the month: August. Healthy programs don't hire coaches in August, and goodness knows the Bears were anything but healthy in the summer of 2003.

Without going into the harrowing particulars of what transpired under previous head coach Dave Bliss, it is perhaps sufficient to note that even Baylor officially termed what took place "unimaginable and unbelievable." In response, the NCAA levied what were perhaps the harshest sanctions short of the death penalty ever inflicted upon a D-I athletic program. And, for once, no one disagreed with the NCAA.

Into this smoldering crater walked Drew. At the time he was 32 years old, with one year of D-I head-coaching experience to his name. It was a pretty good year -- in 2002-03, Valparaiso went to the NIT after winning the regular-season title in what was then called the Mid-Continent Conference -- but the fact that a Big 12 program had to hire someone with such a thin résumé shows that mid-major coaches weren't exactly falling all over themselves to get the gig in Waco. Optimism was in short supply at Baylor, because realism wouldn't allow it.

If you'd told a Baylor fan in 2003 that this would be their team's situation eight short years later, they would have taken it. But even with this incredible rags-to-riches story, this 2011-12 edition of the Bears still has questions that need answering. Here's my take on what we know and what we're still waiting to find out about Drew's team:

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